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A36
world
Guardian www.guardian.co.tt Monday, July 8, 2013
LONDON---The Rolling
Stones returned to Lon-
don s Hyde Park after 44
years with a concert that
saluted both the band s
past and the fleetingly
idyllic English summer.
Mick Jagger even donned
a frock for the occasion.
The band played an
outdoor gig for 65,000
people Saturday in the
same venue as a land-
mark 1969 show per-
formed two days after the
death of founding mem-
ber Brian Jones.
It s most often remem-
bered for the vast crowd
of more than 200,000,
for Jagger quoting Percy
Bysshe Shelley as eulogy
to Jones---and for the
white dress Jagger wore
onstage.
Jagger took the stage in
a similar white smock
Saturday for a rendition
of Honky Tonk Women,
a song the band also
played in 1969.
"Just something I
found in the back," he
said.
Much else has changed
since 1969. Then, the
concert was free. On Sat-
urday, some fans had paid
200 pounds ($300) a
ticket. Jagger turns 70 this
month, drummer Charlie
Watts is 72, and guitarist
Keith Richards is 69.
"It s taken a while, but
we got back," Richards
said.
And the Stones seemed
genuinely glad to have
returned. Fresh off a
headlining slot at the
Glastonbury Festival last
week, the band was in
relaxed but rousing form
during a set that kicked
off with Start Me Up and
It s Only Rock n Roll (But
I Like It).
"Anybody here that
was here in 1969?" Jagger
asked, getting at least a
few affirmative shouts.
"Welcome back---it s nice
to see you again."
The band played on a
stage surrounded by fake
trees and foliage---"like a
cross between Wimble-
don and a pantomime
forest," Jagger said---but
it was scarcely necessary.
The park was already a
leafy idyll on a rare Lon-
don day of bright sun-
shine and soaring tem-
peratures.
"This time of year in
England, it s the best
place to be in the world,"
Jagger said, before quoting
Shakespeare: "Summer s
lease has all too short a
date."
The show featured
some songs that had yet
to be written in 1969,
Rolling Stones returns to
Hyde Park after 44 years LONDON---Prominent art collector
Charles Saatchi said yesterday he is
divorcing his celebrity chef wife
Nigella Lawson because she did not
publicly defend his reputation after
images emerged of him grasping her
throat in a posh London restaurant.
Tabloid newspapers last month pub-
lished photos of the incident, which
Saatchi described as a "playful tiff"
during an intense debate about the
couple s children.
The 70-year-old Saatchi was given
a police "caution" after admitting
assault.
He told Britain s Mail on Sunday
newspaper that he was "sorry" to
announce he will be divorcing Lawson,
adding that they have become
"estranged" and drifted apart over the
past year.
" I feel that I have clearly been a
disappointment to Nigella during the
last year or so, and I am disappointed
that she was advised to make no public
comment to explain that I abhor vio-
lence of any kind against women, and
have never abused her physically in
any way," he said.
In what the tabloid called an "exclu-
sive statement" breaking the news to
Lawson, Saatchi also suggested that
Lawson had herself grasped his neck
in a similar fashion in the past.
The Mail on Sunday said that Law-
son was not made aware of the divorce
move prior to publication.
Lawson and Saatchi married in 2003
and lived in London with Lawson s
son and daughter from her marriage
to journalist John Diamond, who died
of cancer in 2001, and Saatchi s daugh-
ter from a previous marriage.
Lawson s spokesman Mark Hutchin-
son---who previously has confirmed
that she and her children left the family
home after the photos were pub-
lished---declined to comment on
Saatchi s statement.
Lawson is a well-known TV pre-
senter and chef whose cookbooks are
best-sellers in Britain and the United
States. (AP)
Saatchi divorcing celebrity
chef Nigella Lawson
In this Tuesday, October 9, 2012 file
photo, English food writer, journalist
and broadcaster, Nigella Lawson
poses during the 28th MIPCOM
(International Film and Programme
Market for TV, Video, Cable and
Satellite) in Cannes, southeastern
France. AP PHOTO
including Beast of Burden
and the recent Doom and
Gloom, as well as 1960s
favourites like Sympathy
For the Devil, Paint It
Black and Gimme Shel-
ter.Former band member
Mick Taylor, who played
with the band for the first
time at the 1969 show,
joined the Stones onstage
for Midnight Rambler.
"We just found him in
the pub and put him
onstage in front of
200,000 people," Jagger
joked of Taylor s debut.
The band nodded to its
past with big-screen
footage of old concerts,
and saluted its inspira-
tions with clips of blues
greats from BB King to
James Brown and Etta
James. Young Texas
bluesman Gary Clark Jr
was invited onstage to
play with the band on
Bitch.
It all ended with fire-
works and Satisfaction---
and for fans in the crowd,
satisfaction.
"They re the greatest
rock n roll band in the
world," said 25-year-old
James Williamson, who
inherited a love of the
Stones from his father.
"At the end of the day,
they re more talented
than any band that s
around today. They ve still
got an edge to them."
(AP)
Mick Jagger of Rolling
Stones performs at
British Summer Time
at Hyde Park in London
on Saturday. AP PHOTO